Tony β4 Fingersβ Stannard started tattooing when he was in high school.
Next week, heβll be featured on a new TV show.
βHero Inkβ will debut on A&E on June 6. It centers around tattoo artists who have a special connection with first responders.
Stannard, a Tucson native and graduate of Sunnyside High School, joined the Marine Corps in 1994 and served for eight years. While serving in Iraq, he lost his left pinky finger and almost lost a leg.
Stannardβs interest in tattoos peaked when he was a kid after admiring a tattoo artist at the swap meet.
βI was so infatuated with the process of tattooing and how permanent it was,β he said. βIβve always been drawn to that ever since I was a kid. I would draw on myself and my friends with markers.β
When he got to high school, he tattooed one of his friends β real tattoos that time.
And when he joined the Marines, one of his friends told him to buy a tattooing kit out of a magazine β so he did, and continued tattooing.
Eight years later, Stannard left the Marines and tried to find apprenticeships for tattooing. But it wasnβt easy.
βI got the door closed in my face and got kind of discouraged,β Stannard said.
But he kept trying.
Eventually, he met an old friend of his wifeβs, who happened to be working at a tattoo shop in Tucson. Stannard was offered a job β mainly mopping and sweeping up the shop.
Then one day, Stannard tattooed a walk-in client. At that moment, everyone finally realized what Stannard knew all along: he shouldnβt be sweeping up the shop β he should be giving Tucsonans tattoos.
At the time, Stannard was a government contractor overseas. He would be gone for several months at a time, but when heβd come back to Tucson for another handful of months, heβd work 10-hour days at the tattoo shop. It was difficult to spend time with family, he said.
βI made the decision to start tattooing full-time and I havenβt looked back,β he said.
It wasnβt long before he opened up tattoo shop Trinity Art Collective, 7455 W. Twin Peaks Road, with two other people. Stannard eventually submitted his information to A&Eβs tattooing competition βInk Master.β
Stannard wasnβt chosen, but because he mentioned that he had a military background, his application stood out to A&E when the network was pitching βHero Inkβ years later.
βI was really excited because itβs not a competition,β he said. βItβs about listening to someoneβs story and giving them a piece of art. Thatβs what we do on a daily basis at the shop.β
Although Stannard has his own shop in Tucson, filming for βHero Inkβ took place at Houston tattoo shop Prison Break Tattoos, which specializes in meaningful tattoos for first responders. Stannard is one of the showβs featured artists.
βI think the show is important because I truly believe itβs going to bring good light to the first responder jobs that men and women have,β he said. βI think sometimes what they do and what they sacrifice isnβt noticed as much.
βI hope that this will give light on the real heroes.β
Stannard said that matching first responders with an artist who has a similar background is important.
βItβs therapy sometimes β everyone says that with tattooing, but it almost is,β he said. βIβve done certain things and been in certain situations in combat, that when people come in, we can talk about certain things and thereβs no judgment.β
Stannard said not only can he listen and empathize but he can relate to certain stories.
Beyond his full-time job at Trinity Art Collective, Stannard works with breast cancer survivors through the Kellman Beat Cancer Boot Camp who have undergone a mastectomy. For free, he does 3D areola tattooing.
βItβs the last stage of that personβs journey from everything theyβve gone through,β he said. βThat really warms my heart because itβs giving back to that person.β
The first episode of βHero Inkβ airs on A&E June 6. Check your local listings for the time.